, the headquarters of the Zhengyi Daoists, in
Jiangxi,
China Post-Han decline Celestial Master communities suffered from numerous migrations in the late
Three Kingdoms and
Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms periods.
Cao Cao resettled them in the north, and then they joined mass migrations to the south after the loss of Northern China in 317 to the
Uprising of the Five Barbarians. In the 5th century
Abridged Codes for the Taoist Community,
Lu Xiujing laments that Taoist Assemblies no longer observed the proper rules, and the position of
libationer had become hereditary. By the
Tang dynasty, the title of Celestial Master had been debased to the point where any prominent Taoist could claim the title. Celestial Master priests no longer figured prominently in Taoist texts.
Mount Longhu Emperor Xuanzong (712-756) canonized the first Celestial Master
Zhang Daoling during his reign. This brought no benefit to the original base of the Celestial Masters in
Sichuan, but rather benefited a temple in the
Jiangnan area of
Jiangxi province. This temple was located at
Mount Longhu, claimed to be the spot where Zhang Daoling had obtained the Tao, and where his descendants still lived. Recognized by the emperor as the legitimate descendants of Zhang Daoling, these new Celestial Masters established a new patriarchy at their base at Mount Longhu.
Revival The importance of the Zhengyi school grew during the
Song dynasty, with the Celestial masters frequently receiving imperial appointments. In 1239, the
Southern Song dynasty's
Emperor Lizong commanded the 35th
Celestial Master Zhang Keda to unite the
Lingbao School, the
Shangqing School and Zhengyi Dao. The new school was to retain the Zhengyi name and remain based at Mount Longhu. Shortly after the schools were united, the
Mongols under
Kublai Khan conquered the Southern Song dynasty and established the
Yuan dynasty in China. He accepted the claim that the Celestial Master of Mount Longhu was descended from Zhang Daoling and granted the school the right to control affairs relating to Taoism in the Jiangnan area. In 1304, as a result of Zhengyi Dao's increased importance under the Mongols, all of the Taoist schools, with the exception of the
Quanzhen School, were united under the banner of the Zhengyi School, with the 38th Celestial Master, Zhang Yucai, as spiritual leader.
Post-Yuan decline The founding of the
Ming dynasty in 1368 marked the beginning of a long decline in the power of Zhengyi Taoism. The first Ming ruler, the
Hongwu Emperor (1368–98), suppressed the use of the title of 'Celestial Master' among the Zhengyi School, and the 50th Celestial Master
Zhang Guoxiang had his title stripped by the
Longqing Emperor (1567–72). By the
Daoguang period (1821–50) of the
Qing dynasty, relations between the court and the Celestial Masters came to an end. The school's activities became localized to regions in which the school was particularly important. Despite ending association with the court, the Celestial Master himself still retained a great deal of prestige and importance among Taoists throughout China. This prestige, which arose from the belief that he was descended from
Zhang Daoling, was evident when the Celestial Master traveled and attracted crowds of people wherever he went. ==Beliefs==